In an example method of trimming a voltage reference circuit, the method includes: setting the circuit to a first temperature; trimming a first resistor (RDEGEN) of a differential amplifier stage of the circuit; and trimming a first resistor (R1) of a scaling amplifier stage of the circuit. The trimming equalizes current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage. The method includes: trimming a second resistor (R2) of the scaling amplifier stage to set an output voltage of the circuit to a target voltage at the first temperature; setting the circuit to a second temperature; and trimming a second resistor (RPTAT) of the differential amplifier stage, a third resistor (R1PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage, and a fourth resistor (R2PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage to set the output voltage of the circuit to the target voltage at the second temperature.
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9. A method for trimming a voltage reference circuit, the method comprising:
setting a temperature of the voltage reference circuit to a first temperature;
trimming first and second resistors to set a current through a differential amplifier stage and a scaling amplifier stage, wherein the differential amplifier stage includes the first resistor, and the scaling amplifier stage includes the second resistor;
trimming a third resistor to set an output voltage to a target voltage at the first temperature, wherein the third resistor is included in the scaling amplifier stage;
setting the temperature of the voltage reference circuit to a second temperature; and
trimming a fourth resistor by a value of P1 to set the output voltage to the target voltage, wherein the fourth resistor is included in the differential amplifier stage.
1. An integrated circuit (IC) comprising:
a differential amplifier stage including first and second resistors, the differential amplifier stage configured to provide a control signal; and
a scaling amplifier stage coupled to the differential amplifier stage and including third and fourth resistors, the scaling amplifier stage configured to provide a reference voltage at an output port responsive to the control signal;
in which:
resistances of the first and third resistors are adjustable to set a current through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage at a first temperature;
a resistance of the fourth resistor is adjustable to set a voltage at the output port equal to the reference voltage at the first temperature; and
a resistance of the second resistor is adjustable to set the voltage at the output port equal to the reference voltage at a second temperature.
15. A measurement system comprising:
a voltage reference circuit having a reference input and a reference output, wherein the reference input is coupled to an input voltage terminal, and the voltage reference circuit is configured to provide a reference voltage at the reference output;
a sensor having a sensor input and a sensor output, wherein the sensor input is coupled to the reference output, and the sensor is configured to provide an analog measurement signal at the sensor output proportional to the reference voltage; and
an analog to digital converter (adc) having an adc input and an adc output, wherein the adc input is coupled to the sensor output, and the adc is configured to provide a digital signal proportional to the reference voltage;
in which the voltage reference circuit includes:
a differential amplifier stage including first and second resistors, the differential amplifier stage configured to provide a control signal; and
a scaling amplifier stage coupled to the differential amplifier stage and including third and fourth resistors, wherein the scaling amplifier is configured to provide the reference voltage at an output port responsive to the control signal;
wherein:
the first and third resistors are trimmable to set a current through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage at a first temperature,
the fourth resistor is trimmable to set a voltage at the output port to the reference voltage at the first temperature, and
the second resistor is trimmable to set the voltage at the output port to the reference voltage at a second temperature.
2. The IC of
3. The IC of
4. The IC of
5. The IC of
a first transistor having a first current terminal and a first gate, wherein the first current terminal is coupled to a first terminal of the first resistor, and the first gate is coupled to a second terminal of the first resistor and to the second resistor;
a second transistor having a second current terminal and a second gate, wherein the second current terminal is coupled to the first terminal of the first resistor, and the second gate is coupled to the sixth resistor; and
a seventh resistor coupled between the second resistor and ground.
6. The IC of
a third transistor having a third current terminal and a third gate, wherein the third current terminal is coupled to the output port and to the fourth resistor; and
an eighth resistor coupled between the fifth resistor and ground.
7. The IC of
8. The IC of
10. The method of
trimming a fifth resistor by the value P1, wherein the fifth resistor is included in the scaling amplifier stage; and
trimming a sixth resistor by a value of −P1, wherein the sixth resistor is included in the scaling amplifier stage.
11. The method of
toggling a switch between an open state and a closed state, in which the closed state connects the differential amplifier stage to the scaling amplifier stage; and
determining that the current through the differential amplifier stage differs from the current through the scaling amplifier stage responsive to detecting a change in the output voltage as a result of the toggling.
12. The method of
13. The method of
16. The measurement system of
17. The measurement system of
18. The measurement system of
19. The measurement system of
20. The measurement system of
a first transistor having a first current terminal and a first gate, wherein the first current terminal is coupled to a first terminal of the first resistor, and the first gate is coupled to a second terminal of the first resistor and to the second resistor;
a second transistor having a second current terminal and a second gate, wherein the second current terminal is coupled to the first terminal of the first resistor, and the second gate is coupled to the sixth resistor; and
a seventh resistor coupled between the second resistor and ground.
21. The measurement system of
a third transistor having a third current terminal and a third gate, wherein the third current terminal is coupled to the output port and to the fourth resistor; and
a seventh resistor coupled between the second resistor and ground.
22. The measurement system of
23. The measurement system of
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This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/232,311 filed Aug. 12, 2021 and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/260,265 filed Aug. 13, 2021, which are incorporated herein by reference.
This description relates to voltage reference circuits, and more particularly to techniques for two-temperature trimming of voltage reference circuits with reduced quiescent current.
Precision voltage reference circuits are designed to provide a voltage output that is reliably accurate and stable over a specified temperature range, compared to the voltage provided by a conventional power supply. These voltage reference circuits are useful in many applications, including environment sensing applications and medical applications, where relatively small or weak signals need to be measured, which requires higher resolution analog to digital converters (ADCs) that operate from an accurate and stable voltage source. Also, many of these applications are implemented as battery powered, portable, or remote devices, and thus power consumption is a concern. As such, relatively low quiescent current is often specified as a requirement for a given voltage reference circuit.
In an example method of trimming a voltage reference circuit, the method includes: setting the circuit to a first temperature; trimming a first resistor (RDEGEN) of a differential amplifier stage of the circuit; and trimming a first resistor (R1) of a scaling amplifier stage of the circuit. The trimming equalizes current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage. The method includes: trimming a second resistor (R2) of the scaling amplifier stage to set an output voltage of the circuit to a target voltage at the first temperature; setting the circuit to a second temperature; and trimming a second resistor (RPTAT) of the differential amplifier stage, a third resistor (R1PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage, and a fourth resistor (R2PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage to set the output voltage of the circuit to the target voltage at the second temperature.
Techniques are described herein for two-temperature trimming of voltage reference circuits with low quiescent current draw. As described above, many applications require precision voltage reference circuits that can provide a voltage output that is reliably accurate and stable over a specified temperature range, compared to the voltage provided by a conventional power supply. Also, many of these applications are implemented as battery powered, portable, or remote devices, which require reduced or otherwise efficient power consumption and thus lower quiescent current (Iq) draw.
Accordingly, low Iq voltage reference circuitry is described herein, along with a methodology for two-temperature trimming of the voltage reference circuit to reduce output voltage variability over temperature. In some embodiments, the two-temperature trimming process may be performed as part of the manufacturing process, such as during a final test stage of the voltage reference circuit. In some embodiments, the voltage reference circuit is implemented as an integrated circuit (IC), either as a stand-alone or dedicated voltage reference circuit, or as part of an overall broader circuit (e.g., such as an ADC).
The voltage reference circuit is useful in a wide variety of applications, such as sensors and ADCs, particularly when employed in battery powered or remote devices. More generally, the described techniques are useful for any systems which require an accurate and stable voltage source that consumes relatively low power.
In this description, a voltage reference circuit includes a differential amplifier stage and a scaling amplifier stage. The differential amplifier stage, which is configured to generate a control signal to control the scaling amplifier stage, includes a first resistor (feedback degeneration resistor—RDEGEN) and a second resistor (through which current flow is proportional to absolute temperature—RPTAT). The scaling amplifier stage is coupled to the differential amplifier stage and configured to generate a reference voltage at an output port of the voltage reference circuit based on a scaled version of the control signal. The scaling amplifier stage includes a number of scaling resistors: a first resistor (R1); a second resistor (R2); a third resistor (R1PTAT); and a fourth resistor (R2PTAT). Resistors RDEGEN and R1 are configured to be trimmed or adjusted to equalize current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage, at a first temperature. Resistor R2 is configured to be trimmed to set the output port voltage to the reference voltage at the first temperature. Resistors RPTAT, R1 PTAT, and R2PTAT are configured to be trimmed to set the output port voltage to the reference voltage at a second temperature, as described below.
Also, in this description, a method for trimming the voltage reference circuit includes setting the circuit to a first temperature; trimming the first resistor (RDEGEN) of the differential amplifier stage of the circuit and trimming the first resistor (R1) of the scaling amplifier stage of the circuit to equalize current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage. The method also includes trimming the second resistor (R2) of the scaling amplifier stage to set the output voltage of the circuit to a target voltage at the first temperature. The method includes setting the circuit to a second temperature and trimming the second resistor (RPTAT) of the differential amplifier stage and the third and fourth resistors (R1PTAT and R2PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage to set the output voltage of the circuit to the target voltage at the second temperature, as described below.
The techniques described herein may provide improved two-temperature trimming, compared to existing voltage references that require additional circuit components (particularly additional active components such as transistors that consume current, even in a quiescent state) to perform temperature trimming operations. Also, the described voltage reference circuit does not require additional pinouts to perform the trimming operations, thus maintaining footprint compatibility with industry standard products, simplifying manufacturing, and reducing cost. The described voltage reference circuitry can thus provide an accurate and temperature stable output voltage with reduced Iq operation.
The Vref circuit 130 includes a test/trim control circuit 150, a first stage differential amplifier 160, and a second stage scaling amplifier 170. The operation of these circuits is described below, but at a high level, the first stage differential amplifier 160 and second stage scaling amplifier 170 are configured to transform an input voltage Vdd 132, provided at input pin 134, to an output voltage Vout 140, provided to output pin 138. The output voltage Vout 140 should be relatively near the desired target reference voltage and should be relatively stable over the operating temperature range of the voltage reference circuit 130. The test/trim circuit 150 is configured to decode trim control messages 120, provided to the IC as a serial bit stream through enable pin 136, and perform any actions needed to trim one or more resistors of the Vref circuit 130 responsive to those messages.
In some embodiments, the test/trim control circuit 150 includes a processor and/or control logic and memory. The processor or control logic can decode the trim control messages to extract an identifier of the resistor to be trimmed and a trimming value to be used. After the resistor is trimmed to a desired value, that value may be stored in the memory, so the resistor trimming value can be refreshed at a future time if needed. In some embodiments, the processor is configured to recognize an activation code which signals that additional bits transmitted through the enable pin are to be interpreted as resistor trimming messages. The activation code can serve as a password to limit use of the test/trim control circuit 150, so an end user of the circuit does not change the trimming values.
Circuit Architecture
The second stage scaling amplifier 170 includes a third PFET P3 310 and scaling resistors R2 330 and R1 365.
Transistors N1 and N2 are input transistors for the differential amplifier stage, and transistor P1 and P2 are load transistors for the differential amplifier stage. Transistor P3 is the input transistor for the scaling amplifier stage and is driven by a control signal, the output of the differential amplifier, which is coupled to the gate of P3 as shown. Also, the output of the scaling amplifier stage connects back to the differential amplifier input at the gate of N2, creating a feedback loop that sets the voltage at the gate of N2 equal to the source to gate voltage of N1 plus the gate to source voltage of N2 plus the voltage drop across RPTAT.
In some embodiments, transistors P1, P2, P3 and N2 are standard voltage threshold transistors, having a voltage threshold of +600 millivolts (mV) within +/−10%, and transistor N1 is a natural voltage threshold transistor, having a voltage threshold of −200 mV within +/−10%. A voltage threshold gap, VTgap, is the difference between the gate voltage of N1 and the gate voltage of N2, which can be expressed as the sum of VSgNAT 350 and VgsSVT 355.
As described below, R2 is configured to provide accuracy trimming at Tpivot by adjusting Vscale 335, the voltage difference between Vout 140 and the gate voltage of N2. Likewise, RPTAT is configured to provide slope trimming at T2 by adjusting VPTAT 380, the voltage difference between the gate of N1 and ground. These trimming operations are described herein with reference to the circuit diagram of
As shown in the circuit diagram, the current flowing through RDEGEN, IPTAT 340, can be expressed as:
and the current flowing through R1, IVTgap 360, can be expressed as:
and the voltage Vout can be expressed as a sum of the voltages VPTAT 380, VsgNAT 350, VgsSVT 355, and Vscale 335:
VOUT=VPTAT+VsgNAT+VgsSVT+Vscale
The expression for Vout can thus be rewritten as:
The first operation in the two-temperature trimming process is to trim RDEGEN and R1, so IPTAT is set equal to RDEGEN. This results in the following condition:
After the currents are equalized (to within a selected tolerance), R2 330 can be trimmed by an accuracy trimming value 325 to provide the initial accuracy adjustment for Vout at the Tpivot temperature, so Vout is adjusted to the target reference voltage. Then, at the T2 temperature, RPTAT 375 can be trimmed by slope trim value 370 to readjust Vout at the new temperature and provide the slope adjustment. Also, R1 is also trimmed by the same slope trim value 370. Because IPTAT and IVTgap have been equalized, the trimming of R1 by the same value as RPTAT prevents a change in IVTgap at the Tpivot temperature due to the change in RPTAT. Finally, R2 is trimmed by the negative of the slope trim value 370. Because IVTgap has no change, this trimming of R2 cancels out any shift in Vout at the Tpivot temperature that would have otherwise resulted from the change in RPTAT.
An example of the effects of the two-temperature trimming process on the Vref circuit (for example, at temperatures 90° C. and 27° C.) is described below:
In the above description of the Vref circuit 130, in association with
However, based on the additional detail shown in
The more detailed schematic diagram
In this embodiment, Vout can be expressed as:
where Vbandgap is shown as 550 on the circuit. The trimming portion of the voltage reference circuit (the trimming resistors and switch) remains unchanged, as does the trimming procedure.
In one embodiment, the process begins at operation 610, by setting the temperature of the Vref circuit to Tpivot. At operation 620, the switch SW 450 is closed, and the output voltage 140 is measured as Vout(on). At operation 630, the switch SW 450 is opened, and the output voltage 140 is measured as Vout(off).
At operation 640, Vout(off) is compared to Vout(on). If they differ (to within a selected tolerance), then methodology 600 determines that the current flowing through RINULL1 440 is not equal to the current flowing through RINULL2 460. In that case, at operation 645, null current trimming (inull trimming 420, 430) is performed by adjusting RDEGEN 345 and R1 365, and the process repeats at operation 620 until Vout(off) equals Vout(on).
Otherwise, when Vout(off) and Vout(on) are substantially equal, methodology 600 determines the currents are also substantially equal, and IPTAT 340 equals IVTgap 360. The process then continues, at operation 650, with accuracy trimming 325 in which R2 330 is adjusted until Vout substantially equals the target Vref (to within a selected tolerance). At operation 660, the trim settings for RDEGEN 345, R1 365, and R2 330 are locked, and the voltage output at temperature Tpivot is fixed. In some examples, trim settings may be locked by saving the values in a memory of the test/trim circuit 150.
Next, at operation 670, the temperature of the Vref circuit is set to T2. At operation 680, slope trimming 370 is performed by adjusting RPTAT 375, R1PTAT 410, and R2PTAT 400 until Vout again substantially equals the target Vref (to within a selected tolerance). At operation 690, the trim settings for RPTAT, R1PTAT, and R2PTAT are also locked, so the voltage output at temperature T2 is fixed, and the process is completed.
Simulation Results
On the control room side 970, a 4-20 mA receiver 980 is configured to decode the message from the received current in the current loop 950. The decoded message, which represents the sensor measurement 920, is then passed to a display or process controller 990 for further control of the industrial process.
Example 1 is an integrated circuit (IC) including: a differential amplifier stage configured to generate a control signal, the differential amplifier stage including a first resistor (RDEGEN) and a second resistor (RPTAT); and a scaling amplifier stage coupled to the differential amplifier stage and configured to generate a reference voltage at an output port of the IC based on the control signal, the scaling amplifier stage including a first resistor (R1) and a second resistor (R2). RDEGEN and R1 are trimmable to set current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage, at a first temperature. R2 is trimmable to set a voltage at the output port to the reference voltage, at the first temperature. RPTAT is trimmable to set the voltage at the output port to the reference voltage, at a second temperature.
Example 2 includes the subject matter of Example 1. The scaling amplifier stage includes a third resistor (R1PTAT) coupled in series to R1 and a fourth resistor (R2PTAT) coupled in series to R2. R1PTAT and R2PTAT are trimmable to set the voltage at the output port to the reference voltage at the second temperature.
Example 3 includes the subject matter of Example 2. A trim value for R1PTAT is set to a trim value for RPTAT and a trim value of R2PTAT is set to a negative of the trim value of RPTAT.
Example 4 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 1 through 3. Example 4 includes a switch (SW) configured to provide a connection between the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage, responsive to toggling the switch from an open state to a closed state, in which the voltage at the output port varies responsive to the toggling of the switch to indicate that the current flow through the differential amplifier stage differs from the current flow through the scaling amplifier stage.
Example 5 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 1 through 4. The differential amplifier stage includes: a first transistor (N1); a second transistor (N2); and a third resistor (RINULL1). A first terminal of RDEGEN is coupled to a source terminal of N1 and to a source terminal of N2. A second terminal of RDEGEN is coupled to a gate terminal of N1 and to a first terminal of RPTAT. A second terminal of RPTAT is coupled to a first terminal of RINULL1 and to a first terminal of SW. A second terminal of RINULL1 is coupled to ground.
Example 6 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 1 through 5. The scaling amplifier stage includes: a transistor (P3); and a fifth resistor (RINULL2). A first terminal of R2 is coupled to a drain terminal of P3 and to the output port. A second terminal of R2 is coupled to a first terminal of R2PTAT. A second terminal of R2PTAT is coupled a gate terminal of N2 and to a first terminal of R1. A second terminal of R1 is coupled to a first terminal of R1PTAT. A second terminal of R1PTAT is coupled to a second terminal of SW and to a first terminal of RINULL2. A second terminal of RINULL2 is coupled to ground.
Example 7 includes the subject matter of Example 6, in which N1 is an NFET having a gate-to-source voltage threshold within a range of −220 millivolts to −180 millivolts, and P3 is a PFET having a gate-to-source voltage threshold within a range of +540 millivolts to +660 millivolts.
Example 8 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 1 through 7, in which RDEGEN and R1 are trimmable to equalize the current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage at the first temperature.
Example 9 is a method for trimming a voltage reference circuit. The method includes: setting the voltage reference circuit to a first temperature; trimming a first resistor (RDEGEN) of a differential amplifier stage of the voltage reference circuit and trimming a first resistor (R1) of a scaling amplifier stage of the voltage reference circuit, the trimming to set current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage; trimming a second resistor (R2) of the scaling amplifier stage to set an output voltage of the voltage reference circuit to a target voltage at the first temperature; setting the voltage reference circuit to a second temperature; and trimming a second resistor (RPTAT) of the differential amplifier stage to set the output voltage of the voltage reference circuit to the target voltage at the second temperature.
Example 10 includes the subject matter of Example 9, and includes: trimming a third resistor (R1PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage by a trim value of RPTAT; and trimming a fourth resistor (R2PTAT) of the scaling amplifier stage by a negative of the trim value of RPTAT.
Example 11 includes the subject matter of Example 9 or 10, and includes: toggling a switch between an open state and a closed state, in which the closed state provides a connection between the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage; and determining that the current flow through the differential amplifier stage differs from the current flow through the scaling amplifier stage based on detection of a change in the output voltage responsive to the toggling.
Example 12 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 9 through 11, and includes: trimming RDEGEN and R1 to equalize the current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage at the first temperature.
Example 13 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 9 through 12, and includes selecting the first temperature and the second temperature based on an operational temperature range of the voltage reference circuit.
Example 14 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 9 through 13, in which the first temperature is higher than the second temperature.
Example 15 is a measurement system including: a voltage reference circuit configured to provide a reference voltage based on an input voltage; a sensor coupled to the voltage reference circuit, the sensor configured to provide an analog measurement signal responsive to the reference voltage; and an analog to digital converter (ADC) configured to convert the analog measurement signal into a digital signal responsive to the reference voltage. The voltage reference circuit includes a differential amplifier stage configured to generate a control signal. The differential amplifier stage includes a first resistor (RDEGEN) and a second resistor (RPTAT). A scaling amplifier stage is coupled to the differential amplifier stage and is configured to generate the reference voltage at an output port of the circuit based on the control signal. The scaling amplifier stage includes a first resistor (R1) and a second resistor (R2). RDEGEN and R1 are trimmable to set current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage, at a first temperature. R2 is trimmable to set a voltage at the output port to the reference voltage, at the first temperature. RPTAT is trimmable to set the voltage at the output port to the reference voltage, at a second temperature.
Example 16 includes the subject matter of Example 15, in which the input voltage is a battery voltage.
Example 17 includes the subject matter of Example 15 or 16, in which the scaling amplifier stage includes a third resistor (R1PTAT) coupled in series to R1 and a fourth resistor (R2PTAT) coupled in series to R2. R1PTAT and R2PTAT are trimmable to set the voltage at the output port to the reference voltage at the second temperature.
Example 18 includes the subject matter of Example 17, in which a trim value for R1PTAT is set to a trim value for RPTAT, and a trim value of R2PTAT is set to a negative of the trim value of RPTAT.
Example 19 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 15 through 18, in which the voltage reference circuit includes a switch (SW) configured to provide a connection between the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage, responsive to toggling the switch from an open state to a closed state, and the voltage at the output port varies responsive to the toggling of the switch to indicate that the current flow through the differential amplifier stage differs from the current flow through the scaling amplifier stage.
Example 20 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 15 through 19, in which the differential amplifier stage includes: a first transistor (N1); a second transistor (N2); and a third resistor (RINULL1). A first terminal of RDEGEN is coupled to a source terminal of N1 and to a source terminal of N2. A second terminal of RDEGEN is coupled to a gate terminal of N1 and to a first terminal of RPTAT. A second terminal of RPTAT is coupled to a first terminal of RINULL1 and to a first terminal of SW. A second terminal of RINULL1 is coupled to ground.
Example 21 includes the subject matter of Example 20, in which the scaling amplifier stage includes: a transistor (P3); and a fifth resistor (RINULL2). A first terminal of R2 is coupled to a drain terminal of P3 and to the output port. A second terminal of R2 is coupled to a first terminal of R2PTAT. A second terminal of R2PTAT is coupled a gate terminal of N2 and to a first terminal of R1. A second terminal of R1 is coupled to a first terminal of R1PTAT. A second terminal of R1ptat is coupled to a second terminal of SW and to a first terminal of RINULL2. A second terminal of RINULL2 is coupled to ground.
Example 22 includes the subject matter of Example 21, in which N1 is an NFET having a gate-to-source voltage threshold within a range of −220 millivolts to −180 millivolts, and P3 is a PFET having a gate-to-source voltage threshold within a range of +540 millivolts to +660 millivolts.
Example 23 includes the subject matter of any one of Examples 15 through 22, in which RDEGEN and R1 are trimmable to equalize the current flow through the differential amplifier stage and the scaling amplifier stage at the first temperature.
Modifications are possible in the described embodiments, and other embodiments are possible, within the scope of the claims.
Krishnan, Sandeep Shylaja, Chauhan, Rajat, Sankman, Joseph Alan
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